L’exploitation du bois de caribou chez les peuples Yupiit pendant la période pré-contact (Nunalleq, GDN-248)

Translated title of the contribution: The Caribou Antler Exploitation in the Yupiit pre-contact societies (Nunalleq site, GDN-248)

Claire Houmard, Edouard Masson-MacLean, Isabelle Sidéra, Rick Knecht

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The caribou antler exploitation among the Yupiit during the pre-contact period was rather undocumented before the discovery of the Nunalleq site
southwestern Alaska) that benefitted from exceptional conditions of preservation. This very rich site yielded more than 3,400 osseous artefacts that are under study. The procurement and manufacturing strategies of the caribou antlers, the dominant raw material, are analyzed. The typological and technological study performed on more than a half of the collection (2009-2015 excavations) showed strong regularities in the ways the antlers were split and exploited, whatever the module and the type of antler (slaughtered versus shed antler). The small variations observed might reflect adaptations for dealing with morphological constraints and/or immediate functional needs. Despite the harder environmental conditions and intensified conflicts that occurred in the area during the Little Ice Age, Nunalleq inhabitants were highly resilient. The changes between the two main phases of occupation excavated stayed very subtle.
Translated title of the contributionThe Caribou Antler Exploitation in the Yupiit pre-contact societies (Nunalleq site, GDN-248)
Original languageFrench
Pages (from-to)137-168
Number of pages33
JournalÉtudes Inuit Studies
Volume43
Issue number1-2
Publication statusPublished - 2019

Keywords

  • Bone technology
  • Caribou
  • Yup'ik
  • Alaska
  • Nunalleq

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